Perspectives from the field non disruption and non emissions as cultural resources

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PERSPECTIVES FROM THE F IELD

Non-Disruption and Non-Emissions as Cultural Resources Ned Kaufman

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here is a danger,” write some wise Australian conservationists, “that as time goes by the ship of practice will have sailed so far from the ship of knowledge that there will be almost no way back and they will each have gone beyond the range of communication” (Byrne, Brayshaw, and Ireland, 2001). We would then be left, they warn, with “a cultural heritage field insulated against new thinking… and insulated from change” (Byrne, Brayshaw, and Ireland, 2001, p. 44). This is already happening in the United States (US). A symptom of this problem is the failure to update our definition of cultural resources to keep pace with the social (and other) sciences. Half a century ago, psychiatrists documented the health costs of disrupting people’s environment, yet we still haven’t acknowledged human habitat stability as a cultural resource. A quarter of a century ago, climate scientists documented the environmental costs of emitting carbon dioxide, yet we still haven’t recognized embodied carbon as a cultural resource. Environmental practice has lost touch with knowledge. Human habitat stability and embodied carbon are tough values to grasp. People show their appreciation for stability by taking it for granted; it isn’t valued until it’s lost. Something similar is true of embodied carbon, in the sense that its value becomes evident only when we squander it and release new emissions, and even then, the consequences are so distant that many people still fail to see the connection between embodied carbon and their quality of life. Perhaps it’s easiest to think of both virtues as absences of vice: of habitat stability as non-disruption and embodied carbon as non-emissions. Regrettably, we have learned a great deal about the value of non-disruption and non-emissions. I say regrettably because we have learned the value of these concepts by destroying them and then examining what happens next. Facing the trauma of urban renewal in Boston, psychiatrist Marc Fried found displaced residents to be literally sick to

doi:10.1017/S146604661600034X

their stomachs, many suffering from feelings of “grief and mourning” like those associated with the loss of a beloved person (Fried, 1963). Decades later, psychiatrist Mindy Thompson Fullilove found that feelings of disorientation and loss resulting from displacement stayed with some people throughout their lives (Fullilove, 2005, 1996). Apart from urban renewal, psychiatrists have amply documented how older individuals suffer when they are taken out of the environments they are familiar with. The problem for older people isn’t just that their surroundings have changed, it’s the loss of control, which is why elderly individuals who are forced to leave their homes generally do worse than those who leave of their own volition. This is hardly surprising: most of us resent being pushed around. But the point is important, because the kinds of development projects that trigger environmental reviews nearly always involve pushing residents around, either displacing them from their homes and neighborhoods or reordering their environment in unwanted ways. To assess the full impacts of disruption therefore means finding a way to account for coercion. Displacement and the destruction of people’s homes are growing problems worldwide. Israeli settlers have displaced Palestinians from the West Bank, the US forced the entire population of Diego Garcia into exile, and urban renewal displaced 1 million people in Beijing during a single decade. It adds up. Researchers estimate that around 15 million people are dislodged each year by “development induced displacement and resettlement” (notably, economic development displaces far more people than warfare) (Terminski, 2013). Psychiatrists were among the first to demonstrate curiosity about what actually happens to displaced persons, but other social scientists have joined them, and new concepts related to this subject have emerged. Australian environmental philosopher Glenn Albrecht coined the term solastalgia to denote “the pain or sickness caused by the loss of, or inability

Affiliation of author: Ned Kaufman, PhD, Kaufman Heritage Conservation, New York, NY. Address correspondence to: Ned Kaufman, PhD, Kaufman Heritage Conservation, 128 Fort Washington Ave., Apt. PhD, New York, NY 10032; (phone) 914-882-6619; (e-mail) ned@kaufmanconservation.com © National Association of Environmental Professionals 2016

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